Connaught Place: The timeless heart of Delhi
Connaught Place, affectionately known as CP, remains one of Delhi’s most iconic commercial hubs.
Its grand, collonaded architecture, inherited from the British era, stands in striking contrast to the city’s fast-rising skyline.
Today, CP hosts everything from bookshops and cafés to flagship stores of major Indian and global brands.
Yet behind its bustling charm lies a fascinating story of ownership, legacy, and long-standing leases.
Although the Government of India technically owns Connaught Place, the reality is far more layered.
During British rule, several buildings were leased to private individuals. Surprisingly, many of these leases, some nearly a century old, remain valid today.
As a result, ownership is diluted across families, ancestral inheritances, and old rental agreements that modern authorities cannot simply override.
This legacy also explains CP’s wildly uneven rent structure. Some shops still pay as little as ₹100 a month, a figure frozen in time due to historic lease deeds and the Old Delhi Rent Control Act.
These agreements cannot be revised without major legal reforms. Meanwhile, the descendants of early leaseholders continue to benefit from these prime properties, often earning substantial profits.
Ethical debates aside, the arrangements are entirely legal.
Outside these old leases, Connaught Place ranks among India’s costliest retail locations.
Current commercial rents range from ₹300 to ₹700 per sq ft per month, depending on the block and frontage.
In fact, according to reports, CP witnessed a 33% jump in high-street retail rents in 2023, reflecting strong demand for the area’s premium footfall and visibility.
Yet, many long-standing tenants, including multinational chains and national banks, continue paying pre-Independence era rents.
This extraordinary contrast highlights CP’s unique position in India’s real-estate landscape.
A heritage icon of Lutyens’ Delhi, Connaught Place was envisioned as the central business district of the new capital.
Construction began in 1929 and was finished by 1933. Designed by architect Robert Tor Russell, it was named after Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn.
In 1995, CP was officially renamed Rajiv Chowk, but the new name never caught on.
For Delhiites, it will always remain Connaught Place, timeless, bustling, and full of stories.
Image Credit: Nahid Sultan, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
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Image Reference: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Connaught_Place,_New_Delhi_(06).jpg
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